NEIGHBOURHOOD PROFILE · Population

Neighbourhood Profile

England — National

Geography
England
111 region
England
Site context: England · NHS Region (for 111): England

○Figures are your practice where published; otherwise the nearest available area, marked ○.

England

●England
Registered patients · EnglandRegistered · GP practice●England
63,488,912
GP-registered list size · as at June 2026 — varies as you filter to a PCN or practice.
Age mix · EnglandRegistered · GP practice●England
Aged 0–14
15.7%
Working age 15–64
65.8%
Aged 65+
18.5%
Age mix is the GP-REGISTERED list (the people on the registers, as at Jun 2026), summed across 6,145 practices — the same denominator as the headline list above, not the resident (ONS) population.
Resident context · Local-Authority grain
England — resident populationResident · LA○Wider area · Local Authority
56,885,823
ONS mid-year estimate (mid-2024) · 292 Local Authorities
17.2% aged 0–14 · 18.5% aged 65+ — resident age mix (where people live), not the registered list.
Age & sex structure · England · REGISTERED (GP practice) · as at Jun 2026
Male· 31,747,999Age band31,740,913 ·Female
85+
80-84
75-79
70-74
65-69
60-64
55-59
50-54
45-49
40-44
35-39
30-34
25-29
20-24
15-19
10-14
5-9
0-4
How to read: each bar is the count of patients REGISTERED with the scope's GP practices in that 5-year band — males left, females right. Same denominator as the registered list above; this is not the resident (ONS) population.

What this tab reads

Who's on the registers here, and what shapes their health. This tab leads with the REGISTERED population of the neighbourhood's GP practices — its age and sex structure, summed from the practice registers — alongside the public-health context of those same patients: deprivation, ethnicity, life expectancy and the big modifiable risks.

The age & sex pyramid and the 0–14 / 15–64 / 65+ split are now at GP-PRACTICE (registered) grain — the same denominator as the headline list size — so they vary as you filter to a PCN or practice. The ONS RESIDENT population is kept alongside as Local-Authority context (the area people live in), clearly labelled and never blended into the registered figures. Public-health headlines compare "closer to home" against England.

Wider area context

○Wider area context

Not specific to your practice — nearest available area, marked ○.

Ethnicity mix

Registered-population ethnic groups, 2025 · GP-practice estimates

Registered · GP practicepopulation-weighted across practices○Registered · Fingertips estimate
White: 76.6%Asian / Asian British inc Chinese: 11%Black / African / Caribbean / Black British: 6.7%Mixed / Multiple ethnic groups: 3.1%Other ethnic group: 2.6%
  • White76.6%
  • Asian / Asian British inc Chinese11%
  • Black / African / Caribbean / Black British6.7%
  • Mixed / Multiple ethnic groups3.1%
  • Other ethnic group2.6%

Public-health headlines

Life expectancy and the big modifiable risks — registered (GP-practice) grain, benchmarked against the nearest parent.

○Registered · Fingertips estimate
Life expectancy — female
GP practice
83.0 yrs
2019 - 23
Life expectancy — male
GP practice
78.8 yrs
2019 - 23
Smoking prevalence (QOF)
GP practice
13.5%
2024/25
Obesity prevalence (QOF)
GP practice
13.9%
2024/25
These are REGISTERED-population figures (the people on the GP registers), aggregated from OHID Fingertips practice rows — distinct from the resident age mix above. Life expectancy is MSOA-based (2019 - 23); prevalence is QOF-recorded.

Patient deprivation profile

England — where all registered patients live, weighted against IoD2025 small-area deprivation

Patient-weighted · small-area
Patients in the most-deprived 20%
21.1%
IMD deciles 1–2 (England)
Patient-weighted mean IMD
22.3
higher = more deprived
Patients in the least-deprived 20%
18.7%
IMD deciles 9–10 (England)
Patient share by national IMD decile
111102113104105106107108109910most deprivedleast deprived
Decile 1 = the 10% most-deprived neighbourhoods in England, decile 10 = the least. Bars are the share of England's registered patients living in each band.
Most-deprived neighbourhoods in the catchment
Neighbourhood (LSOA)IMD decileIMD scorePatients
Shearbridge & University · City ward
Bradford 044A · E01010834
154.96,129
North Acton · North Acton ward
Ealing 015G · E01034027
2345,493
Portsea · Charles Dickens ward
Portsmouth 027C · E01017032
241.15,406
Spitalfields · Spitalfields & Banglatown ward
Tower Hamlets 015D · E01004309
147.75,175
Wavertree West · Edge Hill ward
Liverpool 035G · E01034401
152.85,172
Leicester City South · Castle ward
Leicester 040F · E01034020
239.54,826
Peterborough Central · Central ward
Peterborough 014A · E01015599
244.24,742
Southall West · Southall Broadway ward
Ealing 026C · E01001362
237.64,629
Top 8 by registered patient count, IMD deciles 1–2 (Apr 2026 catchment). “≈” marks a 2021 LSOA aggregated from several 2011 LSOAs.
Catchment map · deprivation by neighbourhood
Deprivation maps are available at ICB level and below. Narrow to an ICB, borough, PCN or practice (or a multi-select of them) to see the spatial deprivation pattern.
Method: each practice's patients are counted by LSOA (2021), summed across the scope, then matched directly to IoD2025 small-area deprivation (also published on 2021 LSOAs). Patient-weighted, small-area, IoD2025 vintage. 16,479 patients were in LSOAs without a matching deprivation score and are excluded.

Deprivation — IoD2025

Index of Multiple Deprivation (IoD2025) · registered patients, catchment-weighted (small-area) · catchment Apr 2026

Patient-weighted · small-areaEngland · patient-weighted (catchment)○Catchment-weighted · LSOA
National decile
5 /10
decile 5 (mid)
IMD score
22.3
higher = more deprived
The score is the same patient-weighted mean as the deprivation profile above — IoD2025 weighted by where the scope's registered patients live. Decile 1 = the 10% most-deprived practice populations in England, decile 10 = the least, ranked against the national distribution of practices' catchment-weighted IoD2025 scores.

Claimant Count — labour market

People on unemployment-related benefits, % of residents aged 16–64 · registered patients, catchment-weighted (small-area) · May 2026

Patient-weighted · small-areaEngland · patient-weighted (catchment)○Catchment-weighted · LSOA
4.1%
claimant rate (16–64) · catchment-weighted
England 4.1%. The rate is the claimant count as a % of residents aged 16–64, weighted by where the scope’s registered patients live (ONS/DWP Claimant Count, the same catchment-weighting engine as deprivation).

Fuel poverty — modelled

Households that are fuel-poor (LILEE), % of households · registered patients, catchment-weighted (small-area, modelled) · 2024 data

Patient-weighted · small-area · modelledEngland · patient-weighted (catchment)○Catchment-weighted · LSOA
10.1%
fuel-poor households · catchment-weighted · modelled
England 10.1%. The MODELLED LILEE fuel-poverty rate (% of households), weighted by where the scope’s registered patients live (DESNZ Sub-regional fuel poverty, the same catchment-weighting engine as deprivation). Use for general trends + high/low areas, not within-LSOA time series.

Household income — modelled

Equivalised net annual household income (before housing costs), £ · registered patients, catchment-weighted (small-area, modelled) · FYE2023

Patient-weighted · small-area · modelledEngland · patient-weighted (catchment)○Catchment-weighted · MSOA
£38,359
net income (BHC) · catchment-weighted · modelled
England £38,359. The MODELLED mean equivalised household income (before housing costs), weighted by where the scope’s registered patients live (ONS small-area income, the same catchment-weighting engine as deprivation — but mapped via each LSOA’s parent MSOA). Higher income is better. Modelled estimate with wide confidence intervals.

Universal Credit — households

Households on Universal Credit, % of households · registered patients, catchment-weighted (small-area) · Feb 2026

Patient-weighted · small-areaEngland · patient-weighted (catchment)○Catchment-weighted · LSOA
26.3%
households on UC · catchment-weighted
England 26.3%. The UC household rate (households on Universal Credit as a % of households, denominator the DESNZ modelled household estimate), weighted by where the scope’s registered patients live (DWP Stat-Xplore, the same catchment-weighting engine as deprivation). Higher is worse.

Child poverty — low income families

Children in relative low income (BHC, aged 0–19), % of children · registered patients, catchment-weighted (small-area) · FYE 2025

Patient-weighted · small-areaEngland · patient-weighted (catchment)○Catchment-weighted · LSOA
19.4%
children in low income · catchment-weighted
England 19.4%. Children in relative low income families (before housing costs, aged 0–19) as a % of all children (denominator: the Census 2021 child population), weighted by where the scope’s registered patients live (DWP Stat-Xplore CiLIF, the same catchment-weighting engine as deprivation). Higher is worse.

Resident small-area composition — Census 2021

resident small-area, catchment-weighted to the registered list · Census 2021 · catchment Apr 2026

○Catchment-weighted · LSOA
% not in good health
Resident · small-area
5.1%
catchment-weighted · TS037
England 5.1%Area mean 5.2% (each LSOA equal)
% overcrowded households
Resident · small-area
5%
catchment-weighted · TS052
England 5%Area mean 4.5% (each LSOA equal)
% disabled (Equality Act)
Resident · small-area
17.1%
catchment-weighted · TS038
England 17.1%Area mean 17.5% (each LSOA equal)
The lead figure is CATCHMENT-WEIGHTED — the resident % across the people registered with the scope's practices, weighting each small area (LSOA) by how many of the scope's patients live there — benchmarked against England and England. The small-area (area) mean counts every catchment LSOA equally, shown as a quiet contrast. ONS Census 2021 (OGL v3); resident data, never blended with the registered list.

How to read this tab

  • Registered age structure. The age/sex pyramid and the 0–14 / 15–64 / 65+ split are now the REGISTERED population (GP-practice registers, GpRegisteredAgeSex) — summed across the scope's practices, the same denominator as the headline list size, so they vary as you filter to a PCN or practice. The ONS RESIDENT population (mid-year, Local-Authority grain — the people who live in the area) is kept alongside as labelled borough context. The two are different denominators and are never combined into one figure.
  • Deprivation grain. The headline deprivation tile and the patient deprivation profile are ONE method — IoD2025 small-area scores weighted by where the scope's registered patients actually live (the materialised catchment-weighting layer), so the headline score equals the profile's mean. Ethnicity, life expectancy and smoking/obesity prevalence are attributed to GP practices and rolled up to this scope (population- or denominator-weighted). The comparator is the nearest parent — England (this scope is the top).
  • Nothing fabricated. Where a figure has no data for the scope it shows "—". The deprivation decile is derived transparently from the national distribution of practices' catchment-weighted IoD2025 scores; no estimate is invented below the grain the source supports.
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